Copyright © 2002, 2003 W3C ® ( MIT, INRIA, Keio), All Rights Reserved. W3C liability, trademark, document use and software licensing rules apply.
| Issue | Source | Date | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 Variables | I. Horrocks on Telecon | 06 Jun 2002 | Closed |
| 1.2 Definitional Constraints on Conjunctive Types | Telecon | 19 Feb 2002 | Closed |
| 2.1 URI naming of instances | Mike Dean email | 06 Jun 2002 | Closed |
| 2.2 Adding Properties to Other Instances | Mike Dean email | 19 Sep 2002 | Closed |
| 2.3 Adding Properties to Other Classes | Mike Dean email | 06 Jun 2002 | Closed |
| 2.4 Enumerated Classes | Mike Dean email | 25 Jul 2002 | Closed |
| 2.5 Closed Sets | Mike Dean email | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 2.6 Ordered Property Values | Mike Dean email | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 3.1 Local Restrictions | Mike Dean email | 06 Jun 2002 | Closed |
| 3.2 Qualified Restrictions | Mike Dean email | 8 May 2003 | Postponed |
| 3.3 DisjointFrom | Mike Dean email | 06 Jun 2002 | Closed |
| 3.4 UnambiguousProperty | Mike Dean email | 25 Jul 2002 | Closed |
| 4.1 UniqueProp BadName | Tim Finan / Amsterdam F2F | 25 Jul 2002 | Closed |
| 4.2 Cardinality Constructs Levels | Steve Buswell / Amsterdam F2F |
11 Jul 2002 | Closed |
| 4.3 Structured Datatypes | Jonathan Borden / Amsterdam F2F | 21 Nov 2002 | Postponed |
| 4.4 Extra-logical feature set | James Hendler | 31 Oct 2002 | Postponed |
| 4.5 InverseOf | James Hendler | 19 Apr 2002 | Closed |
| 4.6 EquivalentTo | James Hendler | 27 Jun 2003 | Closed |
| 4.7 Does OWL provide built in 'model checking' functionality | James Hendler | 19 Apr 2002 | Closed |
| 4.8 Trust and Ontology | James Hendler, fwd from John Yanosy, Motorola. | 06 Jun 2002 | Postponed |
| 5.1 Uniform treatment of literal data values | Dan Connolly | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 5.2 Language Compliance Levels | Frank van Harmelen | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 5.3 Semantic Layering | Peter Patel-Schneider | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 5.4 OWL:QUOTE | Michael K. Smith | 08 Oct 2002 | Postponed |
| 5.5 List syntax or semantics | Jeremy Carroll | 14 Nov 2002 | Closed |
| 5.6 daml:imports as magic syntax | Jeff Heflin | 10 May 2002 | Closed over objection |
| 5.7 Range restrictions should not be separate URIs | Ziv Hellman | 31 Oct 2002 | Postponed |
| 5.8 Datatypes | Peter F. Patel-Schneider | 17 May 2002 | Closed |
| 5.9 Malformed DAML+OIL Restrictions | Peter F. Patel-Schneider | 7 Nov 2002 | Closed |
| 5.10 DAML+OIL semantics is too weak | Peter F. Patel-Schneider | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 5.11 hasClass ToClass names | Jim Hendler | 13 Jun 2002 | Closed |
| 5.12 Entailing inconsistencies | Jos De Roo | 08 Oct 2002 | Postponed |
| 5.13 Internet Media Type for OWL | Peter F. Patel-Schneider | 12 Dec 2002 | Closed |
| 5.14 Ontology versioning | Jeff Heflin | 5 Dec 2002 | Closed |
| 5.15 Feature decision for CL1 local range | Deborah McGuinness | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 5.16 Feature decision for CL1 cardinality | Deborah McGuinness | 23 May 2002 | Closed |
| 5.17 XML presentation syntax | Peter F. Patel-Schneider | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 5.18-Unique-Names-Assumption-Support-in-OWL | Deborah L. McGuinness | 08 Oct, 2002 | Closed |
| 5.19-Classes-as-instances | Raphael Volz, email of 7/11/02. | 21 Nov 2002 | Closed |
| 5.20-should-OWL-provide-synonyms-for-RDF-and-RDFS-objects | Peter F. Patel-Schneider | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 5.21-drop-disjointUnionOf | Mike Dean | 24 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 5.22-owl:Class-still-needed | Mike Dean | 08 Oct 2002 | Closed |
| 5.23-hasValue-in-owl | Deb McGuinness | 12 Dec 2002 | Closed |
| 5.24-IF-or-IFF-property-properties | Jeremy Carroll | 21 Nov 2002 | Closed |
| 5.25-Justifications | Dan Connolly | 12 Dec 2002 | Postponed |
| 5.26-OWL DL Sytntax | Jeremy Carroll | 3 Mar 2003 | Closed over objection |
| 6.1-Unnamed Individual Restrictions | Jeremy Carroll | 12 Jun 2003 | Postponed |
| 6.2-Compound Keys | Jim Hendler | 3 Jul 2003 | Postponed |
The Date column above is the date of the last change in status.
This document enumerates issues before the W3C Web Ontology working group. As such, it is an internal aide to the working group to ensure that all issues are dealt with. It is also intended that the resolution of these questions be recorded here.
Most of these issues are based on discussions concerning the requirements document, Web Ontology Requirements. In general, these issues are proposed requirements or objectives for which the working group has not yet been able to reach consensus, in some cases due to wording problems and in others to conceptual disagreements. The current version is an initial draft based on email from members of the WG, but has not yet been reviewed by the WG as a whole.
Also included are items that have been deemed implicit requirements, as well as features of DAML+OIL that are not mentioned in the requirements document. Most of these need to be explained more fully before discussion of their potential status as a requirement can proceed. Please send any expansions on these to the editor.
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document.
This document is a working document for the use by W3C Members and other interested parties. It may be updated, replaced or made obsolete by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use this document as reference material.
This document has been produced as part of the W3C Semantic Web Activity, following the procedures set out for the W3C Process. The document has been compiled by the Web Ontology Working Group. The goals of the Web Ontology working group are discussed in the Web Ontology Working Group charter.
The working group has not reached consensus on all topics. Those items are documented here.
A list of current W3C Recommendations and other technical documents can be found at http://www.w3.org/TR/.
"Variables: The language should support the use of variables in ontology definitions. Variables allow more complex definitions to be specified, such as the chained properties example above."
Issue raised by Ian Horrocks: wording on variables is too vague.
See proposal to close.
"Definitional constraints on conjunctive types: The language should support definitions that relate the values of different properties. For example, it should be able to represent the example: style="LateGeorgian" => culture="British" AND date.created="between-1760-and-1811," where style, culture, and dateCreated are all properties"
URI naming of instances (ability to refer to instances defined by someone else). This could be merged with "Unambiguous term referencing with URIs", which seems to focus on classes and properties.
See proposal to close.
Adding properties to "someone else's" instances.
It was proposed by Peter Patel-Schneider to close Issue 2.2 based on the same motivation as Issue 2.3. Agreed to at 19 Sep 2002 teleconference.
Adding properties to "someone else's" classes (ability to extend a class without subclassing it, ability to split Restrictions across multiple pages/ontologies). This goes with 2, but may conflict with the desire for a greater frame orientation.
See proposal to close.
Our Working group has decided to use RDF/XML as our exchange framework and that the semantics of our documents will be carried by the triple store corresponding to this document (see resolutions of second face to face meeting). The basic RDF model [1] allows documents to refer to and extend the resources defined in other documents.
See proposal to close.
Closed sets (daml:List, daml:collection). This could be included as part of "Ability to state closed worlds".
The ability to order property values (e.g. for a list of authors, or a sequence of events)
Local restrictions (the ability to use the same property in somewhat different ways for different classes). Unaccounted for DAML+OIL feature.
See proposal to close.
Qualified restrictions (cardinalityQ, etc.). This feature of DAML+OIL wasn't accounted for when developing requirements.
Proposed resolution by Jeremy Carrol on 19 Apr 2002. See also Jeremy Carrol email of 24 Apr 2002. See resolution below.
Reopened due to request from reviewers. See 1 May 2003 teleconference minutes.
The Working Group decided 25 Apr 2002 to remove qualified cardinality constraints. The issue was reopened due to new information Apr 2003 from Alan Rector. In the 8 May 2003 teleconference, the WG resolved
... to POSTPONE this issue for the following reasons:
- OWL already contains one QCR construct: owl:someValuesFrom (QCR with minimal cardinality of 1) which covers some frequent-occurring cases of QCRs.
- There are some workarounds for QCRs, using the rdfs:subPropertyOf construct. These can be used in simple cases, such as the example in the Guide below. The WG agrees that these workarounds are more problematic for complex part-of relations such as pointed out by Alan Rector in his use cases a) and b).
- The evidence on whether users need this is mixed. Rector's use cases are compelling, but Protege (which has a large user community) has not reported user requests for this feature.
- Inclusion of this feature will put additional burden on implementations. For example, it is nontrivial to add this to Protege.
The Working Group therefore POSTPONES the full treatment of QCRs, while considering possibilities for making idioms or other guidelines for QCRs available to the community.
Unaccounted for DAML+OIL feature.
See proposal to close and revised text. Closed with revised wording.
Unaccounted for DAML+OIL feature.
daml:UnambiguousProperty is motivated by the "cardinality constraints" requirement. No one has advocated its removal and there does seem to be consensus it is a desirable feature. It is provided for in DAML+OIL and will be provided in OWL.
See proposal to close and ammended text.
DAML+OIL has concepts of UniqueProperty and UnambiguousProperty that are very useful but whose names seem to cause some confusion for people learning the language. Assuming we have the same concepts in OWL, we should decide on names that will be intuitive or at least minimize confusion. For a DAML+OIL triple (S,P,0), if P is a uniqueProperty then S, the subject value, uniquely identifies O, the object value. If P is an UnambiguousProperty then O determines S.
See also 3.4-UnambiguousProperty
The language proposal paper (van Harmelen et al) contains different cardinality constructs in OWL-Lite (optional/required; single/multivalued) and in OWL-Full (min-cardinality, max-cardinality). In addition, DAML has a construct cardinality.
At the f2f, there was a proposal to drop cardinality as it can be expressed in terms of min- and max-. A number of WG members objected to this simplification on grounds of usability.
Following the level 1 / level 2 features review, and the decision to revisit the split, there was a suggestion that all cardinality constructs should be in level 2.
Note: The simplification argument above would suggest dropping optional/required and single/multivalued in favour of min- and max- if this were the case.
See the original discussion of this issue with proposed solution.
In brief, there is a desire to incorporate and reason about structured datatypes (e.g. XML Schema complexTypes) within OWL. Technical issues involved with integration of general XML types, XML Schema datatypes and XQuery formal types are discussed.
The fundamental issue with integration of XML types and XML Schema datatypes into OWL seems to be based on the fact that there do not exist unique URIreferences for each XML Schema type.
XML Schema does however define a type hierarchy, and it is the goal of this proposal to seemlessly integrate the XML Schema type hierarchy into the OWL class hierarchy.
DAML+OIL has a limited ability to add features to ontologies and assertions. Our requirements for "tagging" of various kinds goes beyond what is currently in DAML - what do we need to add to address our requirements?
This issue was postponed. Note that the resolution to this issue does not impact 5.6 (owl:imports) nor 5.14 (ontology versioning).
InverseOf is a highly used (some say misused) feature of DAML+OIL. The OWL-Full proposal left it out, because of some worries on the part of some participants that it caused some logical problems for users. Other people argue it is an important expression in the mapping between ontologies.
Proposal as ammended in resolution 5.1 (when used with datatypes) still open, otherwise closed.
It has been argued that equivalentTo is an important property for ontology mapping as it doesn't require that a user who asserts an equivalence knows whether the things being related are properties, classes, or instances. However, DAML+OIL does not allow equivalence between things in separate categories i.e. What happens when a class is equivalentTo a instance? What happens when a class is equivalentTo a property?
Can OWL constructs explicitely constrain RDF graphs? For example, can we develop a syntax that is strict enough to disallow a user from expressing two cardinality constraints on the same entity (in a contradictory way)
From mail to public-webont-comments by John Yanosy, Motorola.
After briefly reviewing P3P, it appears that a similar concept could be used to share information about trust aspects of an ontology, I am not even sure what these trust aspects are at this time, but I suspect it is worthwhile to think about them at this initial requirements stage. It might be useful when creating an ontology that relies on other ontologies to be able to set some preferences about the trust levels desired with respect to shared ontologies.
Some trust properties might include:
The issue is an important one, but beyond the scope of this WG. Someone should take the ACTION to write this up for the issues document.
Discussion: Issue needs an owner. Jim responded to the outside poster citing wording in the requirements document that this is important, but outside our scope. DanC was happy with this. What trust means was discussed briefly. Most agreed it was out of scope. Evan and Laurent objected initially to closing the issue. Evan thought there are some important issues regarding trust we should allow in the language. JimH said that the languages allows for "tags it doesn't understand" and that groups of users can agree amongst themselves to use certain tags to represent trust, since RDF lets us refer to expressions themselves and say things about them. Laurent raised the idea of confidence values as a part of the language. Jim seemed to convince him that "saying things about ontologies" was enough, or that more was outside our scope.
The DAML+OIL specs separate the domain of discourse into datatype values and individuals, and require ontology designers to designate whether properties take datatype values or individuals. As a result, interesting features like UniqueProperty can't be used for properties that take string/date/integer values.
Another result of this design is the distinction between rdfs:Class and daml:Class, about which users have asked for clarification.
It has been proposed that DAML+OIL is a complex language that is hard to implement and/or explain to new users. As a result, different implementors are creating incompatible subsets of the language features that they support. A possible way to improve this situation is to have a particular subset that is recommended in the form of a proper compliance level -- that is, a subset of the total functionality that is easier to explain and implement, and that forms a useable core sublanguage.
This issues was briefly reopened in order to add owl:Nothing to OWL Lite. See proposal to add, agenda update and resolution to do so.
The web ontology language is expected to be maximally compatible, both syntactically and semantically, with RDF and RDFS. It was seen, however, that there might be problems with semantic compatibility and the necessary entailments needed in the ontology language's model theory. Reconciling the difference between RDF's MT and the MT for our language is important. One proposed solution, called "dark" or "unasserted" triples, might be added to RDF, another possibility is an ontology-language-only solution, if one can be produced.
Note that resolution of this issue impacts issue 5.10-DAML+OIL-semantics-is-too-weak.
Closed as described in Consensus on semantic layering, provided 2 technical pieces of work can be completed (see minutes).
This issue was reopened and closed in June/July 2003. The resolution passed by consensus with two abstensions.
RESOLVED: to close the layering issue (5.3) as described in Consensus on semantic layering, with the change that KB large-OWL-entails C if KB-fast-OWL-entails C (but not only if -- Large OWL is now known as Owl Full, Fast Owl is now known as OWL DL).
We expect that future developers will build language extensions based on OWL. Some of them will want to extend OWL to systems that can state implications (IF a THEN b), modal properties (EVENTUALLY, ALWAYS), attributions (The book states that the earth is 6000 years old), and similar contextually restricted propositions.
There are a number of ways to build such extensions. One is to embed fragments of OWL in the new language. Alternatively, OWL could provide a minimal level of support for extensions by defining a mechanism for scoping OWL expressions that will remain semantically uninterpreted. OWL could provide the 'OWL:QUOTE' tag or attribute to mark such expressions. The key requirement is that the OWL semantics ensure that the content identified by this tag, while OWL notation, has no semantic interpretation in this context.
A non-empty owl:List has precisely one owl:first element, and one owl:rest pointing to a tail. owl:nil has no owl:first or owl:rest property.
Are these restrictions syntactically or semantically expressed.
Note: Concern that this is the intersection of 5.3-semantic-layering and 2.5-closed-sets.
_:eg <rdf:type> <owl:List>. _:eg <owl:first> _:a . _:eg <owl:first> _:b . _:eg <owl:rest> <owl:nil> .B:
_:eg <rdf:type> <owl:List>. _:eg <owl:first> _:a . _:eg <owl:rest> <owl:nil> . _:a <owl:equivalentTo> _:b .(assuming owl:equivalentTo is part of the language) In the syntactic understanding of owl:List A is a syntax error. In the semantic understanding A and B entail one another.
IN DAML+OIL, daml:imports is used to specify resources with additional relevant information. A similar feature is needed in OWL to support the "Explicit ontology extension" and "Commitment to ontologies" requirements. However, if this feature is an RDF property, as in DAML+OIL, then it is possible to write axioms that redefine this feature. For example, someone can say "Ontology A only imports resources of type foo" or "Ontology B imports at least one of the following resources." If allowed, such statements would complicate the language significantly. As such, it has been suggested in RDF-Logic that special syntax be used for this feature, so that it cannot be used in assertions in the same way as other RDF properties.
If every time a user wishes to limit a property of range integer or real number to an interval he or she will need to refer to a separate URI, this will cause scalability and usability difficulties
It appears that the RDF Core WG will not produce a solution to the datatypes issue, as witness the lack thereof in the current working drafts and the imminent end of the WG. Therefore the WebOnt WG will have to either use the DAML+OIL solution (which has flaws) or develop its own.
One possible resolution would be to extend the DAML+OIL solution by allowing xsi:type attributes to provide local typing information.
DAML+OIL allows for restrictions that are malformed. Restrictions with missing components (e.g., a restriction with no daml:onProperty triple) have no semantic impact, even though treating them as RDF would indicate that there should be some semantic import. Restrictions with extra components (e.g., a restriction with daml:onProperty triples to more than one property) have unusual and misleading semantic impact (in general equating the extensions of two or more well-formed restrictions). Perhaps both of these should be syntactically illegal in OWL.
DAML+OIL semantics (both the model theory and the axiomatization) are too weak. For example, it does not allow the inference of membership in any restrictions that are not present in the knowledge base, even though many of these are desirable consequences. For example, if John is an instance of both Person and Employee, DAML+OIL does not sanction the conclusion that John is an instance of an intersection of Person and Employee.
Resolution of this issue is closely related to the descision taken with regard to issue 5.3-Semantic-Layering.
Closed per Consensus on semantic layering.
Several people at WWW2002 who were using DAML+OIL suggested that using hasClass and ToClass to represent the difference between universal and existential quantification was confusing, primarily with respect to nomenclature (i.e. the names in no way connote the difference between them). It is suggested that we consider a name change for these terms to something more mnemonic and/or some examples in the walkthru documents that better show the difference.
The Web is decentralized, allowing any one to say anything. As a result, different viewpoints may be contradictory, or even false information may be provided. In order to prevent agents from combining incompatible data or from taking consistent data and evolving it into an inconsistent state, it is important that inconsistencies can be detected automatically.
OWL could have an explicit property owl:inconsitentWith so that all kinds of inconsistencies could be entailed (at least there could be a whole bunch of testcases).
The W3C TAG has just issued a proposed finding about internet media types. WebOnt will almost certainly have to identify, and perhaps register, an internet media type for OWL documents. RDF Core will almost certainly also identify an internet media type for RDF. WebOnt will have to coordinate with RDF Core on the relationship between the media types.
The Requirements Document states that ontology evolution is an important design goal and that versioning information is a requirement for OWL. However, DAML+OIL has very limitied support for versioning information. It only has a tag called "daml:versionInfo" which contains an unstructured string. To support machine processing, OWL needs explict structured information related to versions, such as capabilities to point to prior versions, specify backward-compatibility, and to deprecate terms (i.e., state that they are available for backwards-compatibility only).
Compliance level 1 - a subset of the full owl language - needs a decision concerning local range restrictions. The last proposal included no local range construct. The choices as detailed in [4] below are: The choices are (for Level 1 compliance)
One note, if cardinality is to be added, some kind of local range restriction would be important to add.
Compliance level 1 - a subset of the full owl language - needs a decision concerning cardinality restrictions. The last proposal [1] included the ability to state functional roles - thus there is a way to make a max cardinality 1 and min cardinality 0 restriction. It lacked further cardinality features. Requests (e.g., [2]) have been made for more expressive power with respect to cardinality.
The choices are to:
Note, it is not advised to add full cardinality without some kind of local range restriction. However, max cardinality 0 and min cardinality 1 on global roles may be of some use.
At the Bristol F2F (8 Oct 2002) it was resolved to stay with minCardinality etc. as currently in working documents, with an editorial note suggesting presentation syntax names hasExactlyOne, hasAtMostOne, hasAtLeastOne, hasNone, and a link to rationale by consensus.This addressed Wallace's dissent from a related decision 1 Jul in Stanford.
In the wrap-up session of the 2nd FTF in Amsterdam the group decided to produce a non-normative presentation syntax(with one member dissenting. who was it?@@). One such syntax could be XML, although the group did not mandate that it be XML. However, even so, producing a non-normative XML presentation syntax would be useful.
OWL (and RDF) do not make the unique names assumption. That is, they do not assume that two terms with different names refer to different things. Thus, there would be no assumption that something named Deb is different from something named Deborah.
It has been recognized that it is important to be able to state that objects are different. There is currently the functionality provided by differentIndividualFrom that would allow someone to state that the individual named Deb is different from the individual named Mike. The differentIndividualFrom form provides a way of enumerating pairwise disjointness between individuals.
The abstract syntax document mentions DifferentIndividuals that takes a list as an argument that then states that all of the individuals in the list are distinct.
Both of these options however still require a complete listing of all of the individuals that are distinct either stating pairwise disjointness of combining them in a list.
This issue requests additional support for stating uniqueness. The additional functionality would allow users to state that all individuals in a document, namespace, or ontology are distinct without being forced to enumerate all of the individual names in the differentFrom statement.
In certain cases it is necessary to represent "classes as instances"
Scenario 1: Representing thesauri in OWL. Thesauri are build on terms and have a set of predefined relations to establish links between terms. One can distinguish two kinds of approaches to represent thesauri for RDF(S):
Scenario 2: Ontology Interoperability The representation of an entity as an instance or a class may depend on the context and perspective of the user. For example, in a biological ontology, the class Orangutan may have individual animals as its instances. However, the class Orangutan may itself be an instance of the class Species. Note, that Orangutan is not a subclass of Species, because then that would say that each instance of Orangutan (an animal) is an instance of Species. (example taken from R14 in http://www.w3.org/TR/webont-req/)
Since this decision may be context dependent, the issue of making classes equivalent to instances arises in ontology interoperability and mapping scenarios. For example, a boing 777 may be represented as an instance of airplane in a general aviation ontology. However, in the ontology of a particular aerospace company boing 777 may be a class that has several instances. If both ontologies must be aligned the appropriate mapping must be able to bridge the distinct set of instances and classes.
The DAML+OIL official definition contains a number of sameXxxAs statements (see below) that provide daml: synonyms for resources that are part of RDF or RDFS. This is probably a bad idea that should not be repeated in OWL as it can lead to confusion as to what comes from where, particularly as not all RDF and RDFS built-in resources are so treated, and at least one ``local name'', Class, is used in both RDFS and OWL.
The DAML+OIL statements in question are
| Type | Name | Type | Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| rdf:Property | subPropertyOf | rdfs:Class | Class |
| rdfs:Class | Literal | rdfs:Class | Property |
| rdf:Property | type | rdf:Property | value |
| rdf:Property | subClassOf | rdf:Property | domain |
| rdf:Property | range | rdf:Property | label |
| rdf:Property | comment | rdf:Property | seeAlso |
| rdf:Property | isDefinedBy |
Closed by removing all the sameXXX statements. (see also: earlier discussion of 5.20).
owl:disjointUnionOf is an awkward construct (compared to rdfs:subClassOf) for many tools to support. It can be expressed using combinations of owl:unionOf or rdfs:subClassOf and owl:disjointWith (though perhaps without conveying the notion of providing a covering set when owl:disjointUnionOf is used with with owl:sameClassAs). Dean and other users of DAML+OIL recommend that we drop owl:disjointUnionOf from the OWL language.
Removed disjointUnionOf.
[...] The only thing going for owl:disjointUnionOf is that it uses fewer triples than the alternative. However almost all disjoint unions are small so the number of owl:disjointWith triples will not be that large. [...] proposal of 18 Oct, adopted 24 Oct 2002Removed disjointUnionOf.
A common requirement is to define a class as the union of a set of mutually disjoint subclasses. section 5.3. Disjoint Classes in OWL Web Ontology Language Guide
The introduction of daml:Class as a subclass of rdfs:Class was largely motivated by the fact that rdfs:Class prohibited cycles. The W3C RDF Core WG recently removed this restriction. Is there still a need for a separate owl:Class?
Issue 5.1 [1] also discusses this distinction, but is more appropriately focused on the disjointness of ObjectProperty and DatatypeProperty.
Still needed per Consensus on semantic layering.
Certain constituencies are very interested in owl:hasValue as an element of OWL Lite.
Should the definitions of the semantics for rdfs:range, owl:TransitiveProperty,owl:FunctionalProperty etc. be necessary (if) or necessary and sufficient (iff). The former semantics may be called intensional, the latter extensional. Should the choice be the same for all, or should the choice be made on a case by case basis. What about the relationship with rdf core who own the base semantics for rdf:range and rdf:domain.
Finding proofs is a lot of work; once one is found, it can be checked straightforwardly. It would be valuable to have an exchange syntax to promote interoperability of proof-checking systems and to preserve the value of proofs, once they're found.
Related issues: 5.13 Internet Media Type for OWL and 5.3 Semantic Layering.
Any matching of RDF triples with a DL view is going to have some ugliness somewhere. The current AS&S design has prioritised a clean abstract syntax and allowed the concrete exchanged syntax to be very difficult to describe, test, implement or understand. An alternative emphasis in the design on a clean characterization of OWL DL in RDF graphs, should be explored. This will put some of the ugliness in the mismatch into the abstract syntax. It is important to give an intelligible and correct explanation of what RDF graphs are in OWL Lite and OWL DL, that is genuinely usable by both humans and tools.
Later review determined that we could loosen the original proposal somewhat so that URI's used as the object of an annotation property do not need to be typed. See consensus in minutes of Oct 30, 2003 teleconference based on proposal B1, in Jeremy Carroll's email.
The restrictions placed on b-nodes may limit the applicability of OWL DL to an unnecessarily restricted subset of RDF instance data, for which no such restrictions apply.
Specifically we request, that in Owl DL and Owl lite:
Relational Databases often use keys that are composed of multiple fields. OWL allows keys using owl:InverseFunctionalProperty for a single field (property). It would be desirable for OWL to provide the compound keys capability as well.
We agreed to POSTPONE this issue. See resolution below.
Send issues via email to www-webont-wg@w3.org.
In the subject line, tag them with
ISSUE: title
title should be short enough to be turned into a UID, but
descriptive enough for identification.
Components of the message should follow the format below, using the tags indicated.
An example submission is show below.
TITLE: All tags should green DESCRIPTION: The reason for this is simple. <quotation>Green is my favorite color</quotation>. Enough said. RAISED BY: M. Smith, email of 4/23/02.
The possible fields are documented below. Required fields have a • in the first column.
| Tag | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| • | TITLE: | title |
| • | DESCRIPTION: | One or two paragraphs. Lengthy exposition should be contained in the ATTACHMENT. Or pointed to by a REFERENCE. You can include HTML markup in both this text and ATTACHMENT text. |
| • | RAISED BY: | Your name or the original source. |
| STATUS: | If you think it is something other than RAISED. If you identify it as CLOSED, include a RESOLUTION. | |
| ATTACHMENT: | Many of these issues will need extensive documentation that could consume a lot of space. If needed, and it is not present already in the webont email archive, it goes here. The entry in the issues document itself will link back to this email msg. If you think this issue has already been explained in an existing message or set of messages, provide pointers to them tagged by REFERENCE. Where by pointer I mean the URL in the webont archive. | |
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| TEST CASE: | URL(s) for applicable test case. |
You can string multiple issues in one email, as long as each begins with TITLE. But it will be clearer in the archive if they are separate.
Components of issue documentation will include:
| Tag | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| • | NAME: | Unique id derived from TITLE. Thus, http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/WebOnt/webont-issues.html#uid will always provide a link to the issue. The default UID construction prefixes the title with 'I', followed by a sequence number and replaces spaces and other special characters with dashes. |
| • | TITLE: | Obvious |
| • | DESCRIPTION: | One or two paragraphs. |
| • | RAISED BY: | Name, link to email |
| • | DATE: | Date raised. |
| • | STATUS: | [ RAISED | OPEN | PENDING | POSTPONED | CLOSED | SUBSUMED-BY uid ] |
| • | RESOLUTION: | Short description with link to minutes recording decision |
| TEST CASE: | Link to test case(s). | |
| REFERENCE: | This field is present if there was elaboration beyond DESCRIPTION in the original email (an ATTACHMENT) or if there are other relevant emails in the archive that need to be cited. |
I would like to provide links to all of the relevant email discussion, but I don't think that is practical.
Issues have the following life cycle: